Author Archives: JICare

Preparation for becoming members of health care teams: findings from a 5-year evaluation of a student interprofessional training ward

An interesting article by:  Staffan Pelling, Anders Kalen, Mats Hammar and Ola Wahlström.Setting: An orthopaedic interprofessional training ward manned by students at a University Hospital.Objective: To assess to what extent students from different undergraduate programmes evaluated the effects of a 2-week rotation at the ward on their professional roles and the value of teamwork within health care.Method: A questionnaire was filled in… Read More »

Interprofessional professionalism: Linking professionalism and interprofessional care

Professionalism has typically been defined as a set of non-cognitive characteristics (such as empathy) or as a set of humanistic values and behaviors through which clinicians express a commitment to excellence and compassion (Stern, 2006). Its importance is underscored by the widespread adoption of language and policies by associations, accreditors, and regulatory agencies across the health… Read More »

Using the Sociological Imagination in the Interprofessional Field

The interprofessional education and practice literature has continued to expand at an impressive rate over the past few decades. While it is encouraging to see an expansion of conceptual, evaluative and theoretical papers, there remains a tendency in the field to focus on psychological, social-psychological, organizational and systems perspectives. As a result of using this… Read More »

Improving interprofessional practice for vulnerable older people: gaining a better understanding of vulnerability

Interesting article written by: Clare Abley, John Bond, & Louise RobinsonA key focus for professionals working with older people in the community is on those who are vulnerable, although this vulnerability is not well defined. This study sought the views of health and social care professionals and older people on vulnerability, identifying significant differences between… Read More »

Translating collaborative knowledge into practice: Findings from a 6-month follow-up study

Interprofessional education and collaboration in health and social care have become significant items on Canada’s policy agenda. As a result, they are receiving attention from different levels of government, health services/academic institutions and regulatory bodies (e.g. Cote, Lauzon, & Kyd-Strickland, 2008). To date, however, only a limited number of studies have focused on the longer-term effects… Read More »

A grounded theory of interprofessional co-learning with residents of a homeless shelter

Great article written by Gayle E. Rutherford: Clients, patients, families, and communities must be conceived as partners in care delivery, not just as recipients (D’Amour, D. & Oandasan, I. (2005). Journal of Interprofessional Care, 19(Suppl.), 8–20). Health-care students need an opportunity to understand community member self-determination, partnership, and empowerment (Scheyett, A., & Diehl, M. (2004).… Read More »

Interprofessional primary care protocols: A strategy to promote an evidence-based approach to teamwork and the delivery of care

Primary care reform involving interprofessional team-based care is a global phenomenon. In Ontario, Canada, 150 Family Health Teams (FHTs) have been approved in the past few years. The transition to a FHT is complex involving many changes and the processes for collaborative teamwork are not clearly delineated. To support the transition to team-based care in… Read More »

The design of an interprofessional objective structured clinical examination (iOSCE) approach

Developing an iOSCE presents unique challenges. For example, there is a need to balance the inclusiveness of participating professions in each scenario with realism, and the need to ensure that learners have opportunities to demonstrate their different interprofessional skills within scenarios. Nevertheless, this initial work has helped to ensure that the perspectives of the professions… Read More »

The role of nurse practitioners in hospital settings: implications for interprofessional practice

Expansion of the nurse practitioner (NP) role worldwide indicates a need to understand how the role functions in interprofessional healthcare teams. Through the adoption of a mixed methods approach that gathered on-site tracking and observation, self-recorded logs of consultations and focus group interviews of team members and NPs, we describe the extent of role activity… Read More »

A scoping review to improve conceptual clarity of interprofessional interventions

Interprofessional education (IPE) and interprofessional collaboration (IPC) have been identified in health education and health care as playing an important role in improving health care services and patient outcomes. Despite a growth in the amount of research in these areas, poor conceptualizations of these interprofessional activities have persisted. Given the conceptual challenges, a scoping review… Read More »